Ep 100: Crowdfunding for Nonprofits and Businesses: 7 Best Practices

Today on CauseTalk Radio, Megan and Joe talk to Richard Swart, the Director of Research on Crowdfinance at University of California at Berkeley and author of the World Bank’s Report On Global Crowdfunding, on how to strategically use crowdfunding for corporate social responsibility (CSR).

Companies across America are partnering with community organizations and crowdfunding platforms to leverage their social reach and extend their CSR messaging. It’s becoming an accepted CSR activity, with very little downside and incredible potential.

For Richard, crowdfunding happens when people are asked to vote with their wallets to support a product or project – instead of with their “likes” or social media impressions. It began in the arts community in 2008 when groups used crowdfunding to get their films backed. From there it was adopted by nonprofits and for-profits alike.

Rather than using a committee or advisory group and carefully choosing a couple of causes, equip your employees with some basic knowledge of crowdfunding and let them raise funds for the causes they care about in their local community.

2) Find multiple partners

Through well-executed crowdfunding campaigns, companies can start communicating with and form partnerships with a number of other companies or community organizations. Since the outreach happens through social channels driven by customers and community members, the other organizations are much more likely to want to help you.

3) Extend your media reach

The media tracks and reports on novel and interesting crowdfunding campaigns – firms can take a local project and garner regional or national press through a creative crowdfunding campaign

4) Add gamification and competition

Run an innovation challenge and offer to match the donations made by other community groups that work to solve a problem you’ve identified. By adding competition and rewards, you can have multiple small community groups competing to be the most effective at solving issues in your CSR wheelhouse – and the social reach is magnified.

For example, Timberland’s Serv-a-Palooza Challenge 2014, a six week sponsored volunteerism effort, encouraged people to use Crowdrise to volunteer and fundraise for a cause of their choice. Using the hashtag #TimberlandServes entered them into a contest to win prizes and have donations to a cause made on their behalf by Timberland.

5) Align physical brand with causes and giveaways

Create unique products or give-aways that are only available in store if you are a retail firm, or in the location of one of your community partners if you are not. Create an experience, a party, rally or some other event, but make participation contingent on a certain level of donation through crowdfunding. Smart brands figure out how to drive social engagement into stores.

6) Use your voice in a way customers will want to hear

Too many companies only talk about themselves. Leverage your social reach by backing and supporting the crowdfunding campaigns of groups your support. Many times your social voice is worth more than your donation.

7) Use video

Effective crowdfunding requires the use of engaging and creative video – allow your employees to take part (borrowing from Delta Airlines’ highly successful inflight safety videos) – by using video-based and creative campaigns, the campaign can live on in YouTube or other sites long after the crowdfunding campaign has ended.

Effective videos are well within the reach of even the smallest nonprofits. Take the example of this video for the volunteer-led Telescopes for Tanzania. The video helped T4T to exceed its goal of raising $38,000 via Indiegogo.

Richard is passionate about crowdfunding, and believes it’s the future of fundraising for two important reasons.

1. People live in social media and digital space. This is especially true of the younger generation.

2. The distrust of this younger generation for formal institutions means they want to go straight to impactful projects without having to deal with a middleman. They want to see the impact.

So while crowdfunding is the future, brands need to proceed cautiously and authentically. Dodge Dart is one brand that has successfully navigated this tricky road with Dodge Dart Registry.

“Dodge is a great example of a company that listened to its audience,” said Richard.

Millennials helped a lot of organizations receive cars and rewarded Dodge without a lot of car sales, which skyrocketed after the fundraiser.

4 Specific Tidbits for Nonprofits

1. Start Small

Pick a small project to fund as a test. Pick something that’s tangible. People won’t crowdfund for a general increase in operating funds. Your goal should be to fund a project through a series of crowdfunding campaigns.

2. Be Tangible

Show how the project directly impacts the people you are trying to help. Choose a project that is an ongoing effort (e.g. digging wells in drought stricken areas) because 1 in 5 crowdfunding donors will donate again.